The below comments are constructive criticism of some things about the movie, and I don't cover all of the good things I liked. Other posters have done a good job of covering the good stuff.
I am a B5 fan since season three and onwards, when the show shed a major portion of it's geekiness found a solid footing.
However, with the advent of shows like Farscape, the Sopranos, etc., the bar has been raised for the dramatic quality expected from us fans.
The theme of the points I wish to address involve the simple idea of accessibility.
1. There was a seriously flawed scene which I believe may have alienated some of the female viewers. Even a macho male geek like myself took exception to it:
The human male Captain is in sickbay, speaking with the soft-spoken female Minbari healer. She is in the process of giving him a medical debrief on the condition of the injured First Officer.
Abruptly, in the middle of her dialogue, the door behind her opens and standing there is the taller tactical ops officer (a male human). Without preamble or protocol, he launches into something important to say directly to the captain. He flat out interrupts her for an issue of only moderate criticality. Military rank/protocol aside, this is an interspecies boo-boo.
The Captain has a short conversation with the tacops officer, then he strides past her out into the corridor without any closure with the Minbari. Matter of fact without any acknowledge of her at all. It was as if she wasn't even there. With the camera angle set with the Minbari facing us, and the door behind her, it is an embarassing, set-piece example of male-superior behavior.
To see this in 2002, on a (pilot?) movie about humans in a far future time period, on a mixed-species ship, was astonishing. LOTR had better get with the times. Let us NOT suggest the ridiculous idea that in the far future, soft-spoken females will still tend to be ignored. Hopefully our collective IQ level will have risen by then.
ATTENTION ATTENTION young male candidates for a starship captaincy (or a management position in today's world): Do not handle your mixed crew in this manner. You will lose people.
Outside of this scene, I think the Captain did very well, however.
2. G'Kar had a great, humorous role in the movie. I actually fell off my couch a couple of times with some of his lines. (We seriously should petition JMS for an all-G'Kar-all-the-time cable network
However...
am I wrong, or did G'Kar not ONCE have a meaningful interaction with the female Narn engineer? No guidance, no "howdy nice to see you", congrats or anything. Consider his role as spiritual leader for Narns...and for us viewers. Is he too lofty a figure to care about individual Narns? I think not.
As icing on the cake, on his exit scene on the bridge, he didn't even look at, or acknowledge the existence of, the female engineer.
Are these examples where the "veil of multiplicity" is drawn aside and we're seeing macho lapses in the script writing? Okay, I'll back off and withdraw that statement from the record. The recurring theme is "only the males are involved with the important stuff".
3. Geekiness. On a general geekiness evaluation, I would unfortunately have to place LOTR back at B5 season one or two. Must I wait another two or three seaons for the groundwork (already done in B5) to be redone?
A major geek image was the female weapons officer being shown as suspended in space, punching and kicking weapons bursts from her arms and legs. A not-so-subtle reinforcement of the idea that beautiful women are idealized images only for the male viewers...inaccessible, unattainable.
Could we at least superimpose the ship schematic over her body to show weapons ports, and have a coordinate grid? The idea is cool, but needs to show more of the "machine" in the human-machine interface idea.
Bravo to LOTR by making the weapons officer (a traditionally macho male role?) a female. But to me she looked silly out there floating in space kicking and punching. Okay, I'll get used to it, but it did set off my geek alarm.
4. Racial inclusion. Being of mixed parentage, I am aware of race issues without really holding allegiance to any one "tribe". Enlightened Sci-fi shows like Farscape, Enterprise, and now LOTR have, once again, white people in charge. What is the deal? No one race in our human species is fundamentally superior...this is accepted everywhere except by the Kansas board of education, which recently approved Creationism to be taught again. But why is seemingly so during the casting calls.
Conclusion: It's reassuring to see B5 back on track after Crusade. I am committed to the B5 vision, but there is work to done.
Tell me what you think. Oh boy, if JMS reads this, I'm gonna get an earfull.
------------------
I am a B5 fan since season three and onwards, when the show shed a major portion of it's geekiness found a solid footing.
However, with the advent of shows like Farscape, the Sopranos, etc., the bar has been raised for the dramatic quality expected from us fans.
The theme of the points I wish to address involve the simple idea of accessibility.
1. There was a seriously flawed scene which I believe may have alienated some of the female viewers. Even a macho male geek like myself took exception to it:
The human male Captain is in sickbay, speaking with the soft-spoken female Minbari healer. She is in the process of giving him a medical debrief on the condition of the injured First Officer.
Abruptly, in the middle of her dialogue, the door behind her opens and standing there is the taller tactical ops officer (a male human). Without preamble or protocol, he launches into something important to say directly to the captain. He flat out interrupts her for an issue of only moderate criticality. Military rank/protocol aside, this is an interspecies boo-boo.
The Captain has a short conversation with the tacops officer, then he strides past her out into the corridor without any closure with the Minbari. Matter of fact without any acknowledge of her at all. It was as if she wasn't even there. With the camera angle set with the Minbari facing us, and the door behind her, it is an embarassing, set-piece example of male-superior behavior.
To see this in 2002, on a (pilot?) movie about humans in a far future time period, on a mixed-species ship, was astonishing. LOTR had better get with the times. Let us NOT suggest the ridiculous idea that in the far future, soft-spoken females will still tend to be ignored. Hopefully our collective IQ level will have risen by then.
ATTENTION ATTENTION young male candidates for a starship captaincy (or a management position in today's world): Do not handle your mixed crew in this manner. You will lose people.
Outside of this scene, I think the Captain did very well, however.
2. G'Kar had a great, humorous role in the movie. I actually fell off my couch a couple of times with some of his lines. (We seriously should petition JMS for an all-G'Kar-all-the-time cable network
However...
am I wrong, or did G'Kar not ONCE have a meaningful interaction with the female Narn engineer? No guidance, no "howdy nice to see you", congrats or anything. Consider his role as spiritual leader for Narns...and for us viewers. Is he too lofty a figure to care about individual Narns? I think not.
As icing on the cake, on his exit scene on the bridge, he didn't even look at, or acknowledge the existence of, the female engineer.
Are these examples where the "veil of multiplicity" is drawn aside and we're seeing macho lapses in the script writing? Okay, I'll back off and withdraw that statement from the record. The recurring theme is "only the males are involved with the important stuff".
3. Geekiness. On a general geekiness evaluation, I would unfortunately have to place LOTR back at B5 season one or two. Must I wait another two or three seaons for the groundwork (already done in B5) to be redone?
A major geek image was the female weapons officer being shown as suspended in space, punching and kicking weapons bursts from her arms and legs. A not-so-subtle reinforcement of the idea that beautiful women are idealized images only for the male viewers...inaccessible, unattainable.
Could we at least superimpose the ship schematic over her body to show weapons ports, and have a coordinate grid? The idea is cool, but needs to show more of the "machine" in the human-machine interface idea.
Bravo to LOTR by making the weapons officer (a traditionally macho male role?) a female. But to me she looked silly out there floating in space kicking and punching. Okay, I'll get used to it, but it did set off my geek alarm.
4. Racial inclusion. Being of mixed parentage, I am aware of race issues without really holding allegiance to any one "tribe". Enlightened Sci-fi shows like Farscape, Enterprise, and now LOTR have, once again, white people in charge. What is the deal? No one race in our human species is fundamentally superior...this is accepted everywhere except by the Kansas board of education, which recently approved Creationism to be taught again. But why is seemingly so during the casting calls.
Conclusion: It's reassuring to see B5 back on track after Crusade. I am committed to the B5 vision, but there is work to done.
Tell me what you think. Oh boy, if JMS reads this, I'm gonna get an earfull.
------------------